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Why is Crow Hill, a swath of Crown Heights running roughly between Franklin and Classon and Atlantic and Eastern Parkway, called Crow Hill? Well, even folks at the Crow Hill Community Association aren’t sure, but they aim to find out, as part of their attempt to gauge interest in landmarking the area. One reason for the landmark status: the neighborhood is sandwiched between Crown Heights North, already landmarked, and Prospect Heights, which is up for the designation, leaving it “very vulnerable to development,” says Nina Meledandri, who handles public relations for CHCA. They’ll meet to tonight to discuss the endeavor at 7:30PM at the Haitian American Daycare Center: 1491 Bedford Avenue at St. John’s.
Photo by …neene….


What's Your Take? Leave a Comment

  1. Anytime, Brenda and Benson. I’m always happy to show anyone my community.

    theandrewlee, you are correct, in terms of the Crow Hill Association map, but the landmarking would extend beyond that narrow swatch, and most people generally fill in the entire area between the border of Prospect Hts, at Classon, and the border of Crown Heights North, at Bedford, as Crow Hill. It’s only 4 blocks wide, after all.

  2. As an active member of Crow Hill Community Association I have come across many versions of how Crow Hill got its name from the aforementioned premise that Crow Hill was really part of Weeksville to the theory that all of Crown Heights was once called Crow Hill and the switch in names was to make the real estate more appealing.

    Other sources cite:

    from http://brooklynian.com/forums/viewtopic.php?p=469096&highlight=#469096:
    In 1877, the Brooklyn, Flatbush and Coney Island Railway was incorporated, opening the next year in 1878. It originally ran from the Prospect Park entrance at Flatbush and Ocean Avenues south to the Brighton Beach Hotel, built near the water’s edge. The BF&CI wanted to find a way to get its trains closer to downtown Brooklyn. Since a route through Prospect Park was impossible in this pre-subway era, it was decided to build a tremch through the hill at Crown Heights (then known as Crow Hill) and run the line below grade, connecting with the Long Island Rail Road tracks at Atlantic Avenue.

    from http://www.schwarzgallery.com/index.php?page=painting&modifier=detail&painting=1046:
    Crow Hill was formerly a district in northeast Brooklyn that extended from the hills east of Prospect Park to East New York. According to tradition, it was named after the largest hill in the area, which was infested with crows. An article published in the Brooklyn Eagle in 1873, however, speculated that the area was named for a settlement established during the 1830s by blacks who were then colloquially known as “crows.”1 These impoverished people lived in shanties on Crow Hill, and worked in Manhattan’s meat and fish markets. In 1846 the Kings County Penitentiary was built on top of the hill, and it may be the large structure visible at the far right of Crow Hill. The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts owns six of Fussell’s views of Crow Hill, four of which represent dilapidated but picturesque shanties similar to the one in Crow Hill, Shantytown. The neighborhood was gentrified during the early twentieth century and renamed Crown Heights.

    from http://www.bklyn-genealogy-info.com/Town/TheNeighborhood.html:
    CROWN HEIGHTS: Formerly called Crow Hill, and was the site of a prison. It was a quiet, sparsely populated settlement in the original Dutch town of Breukelen. Once home to Ebbet’s Field, Brooklyn Dodgers from 1912 through 1957. Crow Hill was its pre-prohibition name. When it was Dutch farmland, it was believed to have been called Crow Hill after its tallest hill, whose trees were always filled with crows. Then again that name could have come from the mid-1800’s when there were African and African American settlements there, and the whites called them ‘crows’. A third story has it that the ‘crows’ were inmates in the Kings County Penitentiary that was there from 1846 to 1907.

    from http://www.brooklyn.net/neighborhoods/crown_heights.html:
    From the (1939) WPA Guide to New York City:
    Crown Heights, for the most part a lower middle-class residential area, lies on both sides of the ridge of Eastern Parkway. The section was known as Crow Hill until 1916, when Crown Street was cut through.

    Of course as part of our LPC application process we will endeavor to come up with the closest historically based version of how Crow Hill got it’s name.

    and yes, our official boundaries are between Franklin & Bedford, however our landmarking effort is extending out both to Classon and Rogers to encompass the entire area suggested to CB8 as per the map on our website: http://www.crowhillcommunity.org/landmarks.shtml

  3. “Why is Crow Hill, a swath of Crown Heights running roughly between Franklin and Classon and Atlantic and Eastern Parkway, called Crow Hill?”

    I think there is an error here. I think “Crow Hill” is between Franklin and Bedford.

    Look at the map.
    http://www.crowhillcommunity.org/

    The photo of Row Houses does not look like any of the streets between Franklin and Classon.

  4. Polemicist: block-busting went on long before crime got out of control. It had more to do with racism at first, not crime.

    Benson: You are the most quoted person of the day. I think you hit the nail right on the head. Good job.

  5. It is commonly believed that the area currently known as Crown Heights was originally known as “Crow Hill” or “Crow Heights” and the name slowly changed and an “N” was added. Either way,whats not to like?

  6. Honestly, I would rather that what be allowed to post. He clearly lacks social skills, but some of us would like to hear what he has to say nonetheless.

    By all means, ignore him; disagree with him; criticize his grammar; speculate about his motives; or insult his parentage, but let him post.

  7. Benson, I wouldn’t worry. Blockbusting won’t happen (and wouldn’t have happened) unless crime really got out of control.

    That certainly may happen, but fear mongering simply won’t work until then.

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